Neem Oil For The Garden Ahead!

by Polly

neem oil Neem Oil For The Garden Ahead!Neem oil is an organic pest control remedy that is simple and very effective. Neem oil is pressed out of the seeds obtained from neem trees.

Many gardeners use it for garden pest control of soft bodied insects like aphids, thrips or whitefly. The oil coats the bugs and they suffocate.

Insects would rather die than eat plants treated with neem oil. It disrupts insects’ hormonal balance so they die before they molt to the next life stage. And,

It upsets the insects hormonal system and prevents it from developing to its mature stage.

Neem oil has many complex active ingredients. Rather than being simple poisons, those ingredients are similar to the hormones that insects produce.

Insects take up the neem oil ingredients just like natural hormones.

Neem enters the system and blocks the real hormones from working properly.


Insects “forget” to eat, to mate, or they stop laying eggs. Some forget that they can fly. If eggs are produced they don’t hatch, or the larvae don’t molt.
Obviously insects that are too confused to eat or breed will not survive. The population eventually plummets, and they disappear.

Neem oil makes the plants it touches taste bitter, so pests won’t eat them, as a “contact” insecticide. Insects “forget” to eat after they’ve been in contact with even traces of neem oil.

The greatest benefit of using neem oil is that it doesn’t harm beneficial insects. Butterflies, earthworms, and bees all help plants pollinate or absorb nutrients.

Lacewings eat insects trying to feed on the crops. But these bugs won’t have a negative reaction to neem oil

The main reason is that insects need to ingest the neem oil to be affected, and beneficial insects don’t eat your plants. But you can still kill beneficial insects if you smother them with neem oil, so please be careful.

Beneficial insects are most active during the day. The best time to spray neem insecticide is very early in the morning, so the spray can dry before the good insects become active.

Also a good time is the late afternoon or evening. Once the spray has dried it does not harm your bees, ladybugs, lacewings, predatory mites and wasps etc.

Benefits of neem oil insecticide

  • low toxicity, safe for the applicator
  • low environmental impact
  • organic and biorational
  • relatively broad-usage allowed
  • easy on beneficial insects and mites

Beside all of the benefits of neem oil the only real downside is that it is not very persistent so may need to be re-applied every few days .

Many gardeners, however, consider this characteristic to actually be another benefit because neem oil insecticide won’t interfere with beneficial insects or delay harvest.

Neem oil kills:

  • Garden Snails And Slugs
  • Aphids, Armyworms
  • Bean Leaf Beetles, Colorado Potato Beetles, Cucumber Beetles, Japanese Beetles
  • Moths
  • Hornworms, Cabbageworms, Melon worms, Tomato fruit worms
  • Ants
  • Loopers
  • Squash Bugs
  • Fruit Fly
  • Whiteflies

You can spray vegetables and fruit trees with neem spray right up until the day of harvest. Also, there are no herbs, vegetables or fruit trees that are sensitive to oil sprays.

Soil drenches are designed to get the plant to absorb the neem oil through the roots. There are some vegetables, like onions, cabbages, and tomatoes, that do not like soil drenches with raw neem oil. Spraying, however, is fine.

Want  to know more  about neem oil?

Then, post your question below.

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Yours truly, Polly – Organic Gardener


{ 8 comments… read them below or add one }

Curtis Jungman May 20, 2010 at 5:00 pm

Does a mixture using Neem Oil kill lawn fleas?

Polly May 20, 2010 at 7:19 pm

Mix 1 tsp. (cap full) of neem oil per 1 qt. of water (4 tsp. per gallon), and add a drop of liquid dish detergent to act as a sticking agent. You will need to make larger batches of neem oil spray depending on the size of your lawn. Use a backpack sprayer to apply neem oil solution to your lawn, which will act as a tick repellent.

Jeneva Devincenzi June 17, 2010 at 3:36 am

Greetings having been kinda within a mission to get further uses of neem oilwhen stumbled within your blog so ive bookmarked it to return to :)

Haneem Muhammad June 28, 2010 at 2:03 pm

Interesting section in this post neem oil Kills, list of living beings it kills, definitely neem oil is a god gifted resource, it works in many ways and has got multiple uses to the humans.

NEEM August 16, 2010 at 7:43 am

Use Neem cake in your soil amendments, use neem oil as a topical application. We sell water expressed, expeller pressed, neem oil, neem cake, karanja oil and karanja cake. Be sure the neem products yu buy are `100% neem and also that they are NOT solvent expressed. Solvents affect the property’s of neem and introduce heavy metals to your garden.
NEEM

Neem November 4, 2010 at 8:33 pm

Neem is a fast-growing tree that can reach a height of 15–20 m (about 50–65 feet), rarely to 35–40 m (115–131 feet). It is evergreen, but in severe drought it may shed most or nearly all of its leaves. The branches are wide spread. The fairly dense crown is roundish or oval and may reach the diameter of 15–20 m in old, free-standing specimens. It blossoms in spring with the small white flowers. It has a straight trunk. Its bark is hard rough and scaly, fissured even in small trees.

http://gardener.saosis.com/neem/

Mary March 22, 2012 at 11:55 am

Can neem oil stop chiggers and ticks?

Polly March 23, 2012 at 2:11 am

A bath with neem oil twice a week for at least a month should stop them

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